| Literature DB >> 31979199 |
Victor Jaoko1,2,3, Clauvis Nji Tizi Taning1, Simon Backx2, Jackson Mulatya3, Jan Van den Abeele4, Titus Magomere5, Florence Olubayo5, Sven Mangelinckx2, Stefaan P O Werbrouck1, Guy Smagghe1.
Abstract
Due to potential health and environmental risks of synthetic pesticides, coupled with their non-selectivity and pest resistance, there has been increasing demand for safer and biodegradable alternatives for insect pest management. Botanical pesticides have emerged as a promising alternative due to their non-persistence, high selectivity, and low mammalian toxicity. Six Meliaceae plant species, Azadirachta indica, Azadirachta excelsa, Azadirachta siamens, Melia azedarach, Melia toosendan, and Melia volkensii, have been subject to botanical pesticide evaluation. This review focuses on Melia volkensii, which has not been intensively studied. M. volkensii, a dryland tree species native to East Africa, has shown activity towards a broad range of insect orders, including dipterans, lepidopterans and coleopterans. Its extracts have been reported to have growth inhibiting and antifeedant properties against Schistocerca gregaria, Trichoplusia ni, Pseudaletia unipuncta, Epilachna varivestis, Nezara viridula, several Spodoptera species and other insect pests. Mortality in mosquitoes has also been reported. Several limonoids with a wide range of biological activities have been isolated from the plant, including volkensin, salannin, toosendanin, trichilin-class limonoids, volkendousin, kulactone among others. This paper presents a concise review of published information on the phytochemical composition and potential of M. volkensii for application in insect pest management.Entities:
Keywords: Melia volkensii; Meliaceae; antifeedant; botanical pesticide; growth inhibitor; insect pest; limonoid
Year: 2020 PMID: 31979199 PMCID: PMC7076692 DOI: 10.3390/plants9020143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Melia volkensii and its various parts: (a) 10-year old M. volkensii plantation, (b) leaves, (c) seeds, (d) fruits and (e) nuts [23].
Melia volkensii as a botanical pesticide for insect pest control.
| Target Insect * | Order | Biological Activity | Plant Part Used | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desert locust, | Orthoptera | Antifeedant, repellency, growth inhibition, mortality | Fruit | [ |
| Cabbage looper, | Lepidoptera | Antifeedant, growth inhibition, mortality | Fruit, seed | [ |
| True armyworm, | Lepidoptera | Antifeedant, growth inhibition | Fruit, seed | [ |
| Diamondback moth, | Lepidoptera | Antifeedant | Fruits | [ |
| Stink bug, | Hemiptera | Antifeedant, growth disruption, mortality | Fruit | [ |
|
| Hemiptera | Growth inhibition | Fruit | [ |
| Mexican bean beetle, | Coleoptera | Antifeedant, growth inhibition | Seed | [ |
| Yellow fever mosquito, | Diptera | Growth inhibition, mortality | Fruit | [ |
|
| Diptera | Growth inhibition | Fruit kernel | [ |
| Southern house mosquito, | Diptera | Oviposition deterrence, mortality | Fruit | [ |
| London underground mosquito, | Diptera | Growth inhibition, mortality | Seed | [ |
* Non exhaustive list of potential target insect pests.
Figure 2Chemical structures of compounds isolated from Melia volkensii with antifeedant and growth-inhibition activity against insects.
Phytochemical investigation of Melia volkensii.
| Compound * | Plant Part Isolated From | Biological Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Volkensin | Seed, fruit | Antifeedant against fall armyworms, | [ |
| Salannin | Seed, fruit | Antifeedant and weight reduction against | [ |
| Toosendanin | Root bark | Growth inhibitor and oviposition deterrent against | [ |
| Meliantriol | Not reported | Antifeedant | [ |
| Unsaturated fatty acids (oleic acid, linoleic acid and gadoleic acid); saturated fatty acids (palmitic acid, stearic acid and arachidic acid) | Seed | Synergistic enhancement of insecticidal activity | [ |
| 1-cinnamoyltrichilinin | Not reported | Antifeedant against | [ |
| 1-tigloyltrichilinin | Not reported | Antifeedant against | [ |
| 1-acetyltrichilinin | Not reported | Antifeedant against | [ |
| Nimbolin B | Not reported | Antifeedant against | [ |
| Ohchinin-3-acetate | Fruit | Antifeedant | [ |
* Non exhaustive list of compounds present in M. volkensii.
Figure 3Chemical structures of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids isolated from Melia volkensii.
Figure 4Further chemical structures of compounds isolated from Melia volkensii with antifeedant and growth-inhibition activity against insects.